When you think Australian Ninja Warrior, muscles usually come to mind.
Ex-footballers, gymnasts, body builders, iron men.
These are the kinds of people we’re used to seeing on the Channel 9 show. Athletes whose bodies say “I am big and strong and I will win”.
People like this:
So when 19-year-old budding poet, Alex Cusack, walked out onto the Ninja Warrior course on Monday night, he knew he would be overlooked.
"I think on paper I don't really have much of a chance. I am not very large, I don't weigh much and I spend a lot of my time writing poetry," he said in an interview before his attempt.
Six potential ninjas had tried and failed before Alex's turn.
Even the hosts were underestimating him.
"There's something going on with this kid. He doesn't look like much of a ninja," said Rebecca Madden as he breezed through the first few obstacles.
Even halfway through, Ben Fordham wasn't ready to give him props just yet, "He's giving it a red hot go," he remarked.
But Alex, who is also a kids' party host absolutely smashed it.
He became the first competitor of the night to get to the top of the wall and hit the buzzer, sending him through to the next round.
"It was one of the greatest times I've ever had in my life," he said afterwards.
"I had very high expectations but very low expectations."
And then Alex went onto dish the audience up some original slam poetry.
Here's Alex post win. Article continues after video.
"On the course they do but meet. The young the old here to compete.
"Some are tall and steadily built, others others lith and light as silk.
"Some dash through like a flash of lightning, others don speedos and it's quite frightening.
"But no matter who or what they be, it's the mount that's the foe of you and me.
"So gather around for all the drama and lets see who conquers Midoriyama."
Thank you Alex for proving that size doesn't matter.
I think sometimes we need to be reminded of that fact.
Top Comments
Hi - small correction to your article to do justice to what a wordsmith Alex is, as well as a fierce ninja champion. He said "I have very high aspirations but low expectations."
That makes a lot more sense!
Actually, size matters very much - because the bigger folks are usually doomed to fail the parts where they have to carry their whole weight on their fingers. It's actually the rock climbers who do best on these courses - skinnier people who spend a lot of time hanging by their fingers. Don't like the way this year they're proclaiming "There will be a winner!" and didn't like the way people got upset that there wasn't a "winner" last time - it's not a sporting competition where you have a winner every season; it's who can get through to have a shot at the final challenge, which isn't supposed to be easy and isn't necessarily conquered EVERY time...
I believe they've changed the definition of 'winner' so that there definitely will be one.
Definitely. If you've watched the US version each year you see that the larger and more muscular athletes very quickly realise their bulk doesn't help on the upper body parts of the courses and they come back in later years leaner. Height can help with wingspan and reach, but bulky muscles just add weight to be carried around.
The change in the definition of winner sort of cheapens it a bit, I think. They probably should have done more work in the first season in selling how incredibly difficult the course is and how long it took for people to win in the US (7 seasons).